vyvanse/vendor/github.com/Shopify/sarama/sarama.go

100 lines
7.7 KiB
Go

/*
Package sarama is a pure Go client library for dealing with Apache Kafka (versions 0.8 and later). It includes a high-level
API for easily producing and consuming messages, and a low-level API for controlling bytes on the wire when the high-level
API is insufficient. Usage examples for the high-level APIs are provided inline with their full documentation.
To produce messages, use either the AsyncProducer or the SyncProducer. The AsyncProducer accepts messages on a channel
and produces them asynchronously in the background as efficiently as possible; it is preferred in most cases.
The SyncProducer provides a method which will block until Kafka acknowledges the message as produced. This can be
useful but comes with two caveats: it will generally be less efficient, and the actual durability guarantees
depend on the configured value of `Producer.RequiredAcks`. There are configurations where a message acknowledged by the
SyncProducer can still sometimes be lost.
To consume messages, use the Consumer. Note that Sarama's Consumer implementation does not currently support automatic
consumer-group rebalancing and offset tracking. For Zookeeper-based tracking (Kafka 0.8.2 and earlier), the
https://github.com/wvanbergen/kafka library builds on Sarama to add this support. For Kafka-based tracking (Kafka 0.9
and later), the https://github.com/bsm/sarama-cluster library builds on Sarama to add this support.
For lower-level needs, the Broker and Request/Response objects permit precise control over each connection
and message sent on the wire; the Client provides higher-level metadata management that is shared between
the producers and the consumer. The Request/Response objects and properties are mostly undocumented, as they line up
exactly with the protocol fields documented by Kafka at
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/A+Guide+To+The+Kafka+Protocol
Metrics are exposed through https://github.com/rcrowley/go-metrics library in a local registry.
Broker related metrics:
+----------------------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Name | Type | Description |
+----------------------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| incoming-byte-rate | meter | Bytes/second read off all brokers |
| incoming-byte-rate-for-broker-<broker-id> | meter | Bytes/second read off a given broker |
| outgoing-byte-rate | meter | Bytes/second written off all brokers |
| outgoing-byte-rate-for-broker-<broker-id> | meter | Bytes/second written off a given broker |
| request-rate | meter | Requests/second sent to all brokers |
| request-rate-for-broker-<broker-id> | meter | Requests/second sent to a given broker |
| request-size | histogram | Distribution of the request size in bytes for all brokers |
| request-size-for-broker-<broker-id> | histogram | Distribution of the request size in bytes for a given broker |
| request-latency-in-ms | histogram | Distribution of the request latency in ms for all brokers |
| request-latency-in-ms-for-broker-<broker-id> | histogram | Distribution of the request latency in ms for a given broker |
| response-rate | meter | Responses/second received from all brokers |
| response-rate-for-broker-<broker-id> | meter | Responses/second received from a given broker |
| response-size | histogram | Distribution of the response size in bytes for all brokers |
| response-size-for-broker-<broker-id> | histogram | Distribution of the response size in bytes for a given broker |
+----------------------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
Note that we do not gather specific metrics for seed brokers but they are part of the "all brokers" metrics.
Producer related metrics:
+-------------------------------------------+------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Name | Type | Description |
+-------------------------------------------+------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| batch-size | histogram | Distribution of the number of bytes sent per partition per request for all topics |
| batch-size-for-topic-<topic> | histogram | Distribution of the number of bytes sent per partition per request for a given topic |
| record-send-rate | meter | Records/second sent to all topics |
| record-send-rate-for-topic-<topic> | meter | Records/second sent to a given topic |
| records-per-request | histogram | Distribution of the number of records sent per request for all topics |
| records-per-request-for-topic-<topic> | histogram | Distribution of the number of records sent per request for a given topic |
| compression-ratio | histogram | Distribution of the compression ratio times 100 of record batches for all topics |
| compression-ratio-for-topic-<topic> | histogram | Distribution of the compression ratio times 100 of record batches for a given topic |
+-------------------------------------------+------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
*/
package sarama
import (
"io/ioutil"
"log"
)
// Logger is the instance of a StdLogger interface that Sarama writes connection
// management events to. By default it is set to discard all log messages via ioutil.Discard,
// but you can set it to redirect wherever you want.
var Logger StdLogger = log.New(ioutil.Discard, "[Sarama] ", log.LstdFlags)
// StdLogger is used to log error messages.
type StdLogger interface {
Print(v ...interface{})
Printf(format string, v ...interface{})
Println(v ...interface{})
}
// PanicHandler is called for recovering from panics spawned internally to the library (and thus
// not recoverable by the caller's goroutine). Defaults to nil, which means panics are not recovered.
var PanicHandler func(interface{})
// MaxRequestSize is the maximum size (in bytes) of any request that Sarama will attempt to send. Trying
// to send a request larger than this will result in an PacketEncodingError. The default of 100 MiB is aligned
// with Kafka's default `socket.request.max.bytes`, which is the largest request the broker will attempt
// to process.
var MaxRequestSize int32 = 100 * 1024 * 1024
// MaxResponseSize is the maximum size (in bytes) of any response that Sarama will attempt to parse. If
// a broker returns a response message larger than this value, Sarama will return a PacketDecodingError to
// protect the client from running out of memory. Please note that brokers do not have any natural limit on
// the size of responses they send. In particular, they can send arbitrarily large fetch responses to consumers
// (see https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-2063).
var MaxResponseSize int32 = 100 * 1024 * 1024